It sounds like "de," but almost Koreans don't know that it sounds "de," they also hear it, "ne." So you can pronounce "ne." P.S. Actually, Korea's 'ㄴ' sometimes pronounce between "n" and "d." So unless you say D of "De" strongly, all Koreans would hear it "ne." I am Korean, so my English would not be good enough to understand you.😅
i think it's because they talk so nasaly. their language is so nasal sound. most of time when you caught a cold lots of alphabet goes weird to pronounce cause of your nasal situation. m and b, n and d...
for anyone wondering if its "de" or "ne", its both. in english, you usually say the "n" sound by pushing your tongue to the roof of your mouth, then making the sound. in Korean, to say "네" you instead put your tongue up against your teeth with your mouth closed (teeth shut), NOT the roof of your mouth. Do you see how this way of saying "n" sound is similar to how in english you say "d" sound? (you out your tongue behind your teeth then pull it back to make the actual "d" sound) Hence, when you say "네" you may hear a combo of "de" and "ne" because both sounds are made with almost identical tongue/vocal movement (you hear "de" when the tongue is pulled faster than the mouth opens to make the ”eh" sound) Remember, 한굴 alphabet is based on how your mouth looks while saying it. For example, ㄴ where the vertical stick is your teeth and horizontal stick is your tongue. Hope this helps y'all 🙏
I had to help my friend understand this. Also there's a nasally sound when Korean is spoken which also plays into it. I know many people get confused by this, so thanks for the explanation
But are you supposed to engage your nose in the sound or not? The actual main difference between d and n sounds in many languages is that n involves the nose, making it a nasal sound. It seems like somehow they aren't using the nose at all for this sound in Korean.
Because of tongue placement it sounds like both to English speakers. We pronounce the “N” sound with our tongue at the the roof of the mouth and in Korean it’s done with the tongue in between your teeth. Kinda like when we pronounce “th” but without the air.
I guess you just have to get used to it there are a lot of similar cases in Korean, like ㅂ(b/p) and ㅁ(m). I guess they sound soo similar to them they can't really differentiate and use a sound in between but to other languages the difference is loud and clear🤷🏼♂️
The Korean consonants ㄴ and ㅁ are both nasal consonants, meaning when you pronounce them air comes out of your nose. Sometimes, especially with words like 네 or 뭐 Korean people/speakers won’t let air come out of their nose. Thus, giving the illusion they’re saying the ㄷ or ㅂ sound instead. This is what commonly happens but sometimes they’ll pronounce the nasal consonant, you’ll sound more slightly more natrual if you don’t. The Ne versus De sound is misconstrued because Korean and English are not a one to one language. Whilst the Korean and English alphabet have some common sounds, they’re both have entirely different tongue placements and intonations. The Korean ㄷ and English D don’t sound the same and shouldn’t be used interchangeably. Anyway, thank you for reading this and I hope it helps!
@@somerandomwords this doesn't explain anything. Same things can be said for any other languages. M and N are nasal sounds and if you hold your nose while talking they do sound like d and b but so what? IMO they should own up to it and teach it like that. Just say ㅁ is m but sometimes sounds like b 😆 like "c" is "k" but sometimes "s"😂
I’m a Spanish speaker myself and when you said Ne, and you were pronouncing it in different scenarios it sounded like Te (Tea) in Spanish hahaha 😂 great job teacher. I need to teach myself hangul this year, it’s my dream to visit South Korea 🇰🇷 in the future!❤
I can understand how g and k can sound similar or m to b or p to b even s->j->ch and d->t. But how nae is meant to sound like dae, is totally strange to me.
For ones who are confused cause it sounds like "de" So I'm leatning Korean,and some letters sound different in the context they speak,in this time sometimes it sounds like it writes: "ne",but usually it's like de But if you listen closely,you'll hear that it's not just de,it's something between d and n 💖hope this helps💖
Guys here are some other tips to learn Korean: 1. Learn all of the vowels and double vowels 2. Learn all the consonants 3. Practice reading in Korean 4. Learn words 5. Practice writing when you know some words 6. Learn grammar 7. Expand your vocabulary 8. Watch K dramas and listen to K-pop to understand how fluent people speak 9. Practice every day Some apps you can practice on are: DuoLingo, Cake, and LingoDeer Those apps cannot make you fluent but can help you improve your vocabulary and grammar What can make you fluent after you’ve done all of those apps is watching K dramas or listening to K pop and practicing with someone who’s fluent in Korean Thanks for reading 😊
She actually is saying "ne" each time, but the Korean n has the same tongue position as the Korean d, so to non-native ears they can sound alike. It's like an illusion, and because you are expecting an n sound, but hear a half n, half d sound, your brain interprets it as more of a d than an n. The same thing often happens with the Japanese r and l sounds, for example.
Her : just remember the word "ne"
Also her : "deeee"
😂
😂😂😂😂
Bcoz in Korea they pronounce ne as de
Maybe an allophone, like tea and trip in english?
@@Crafties_hubno bro... learn hangul before talking
How old are you?
"Ne."
Im sorry?
"Ne." 😂
it means 4
Ney
Ilove you...
''Ne.''
Do you love me
''Ne''
We love ech ather
''Ne''
We dont love ech ather
Ne ..ne ...ne
❤
"Ne" Translated in Turkish "what?" It means
Sounds like "de"
Sm question 😂
It sounds like "de," but almost Koreans don't know that it sounds "de," they also hear it, "ne."
So you can pronounce "ne."
P.S. Actually, Korea's 'ㄴ' sometimes pronounce between "n" and "d." So unless you say D of "De" strongly, all Koreans would hear it "ne."
I am Korean, so my English would not be good enough to understand you.😅
@@50ng Ohhh thankyou
i think it's because they talk so nasaly. their language is so nasal sound. most of time when you caught a cold lots of alphabet goes weird to pronounce cause of your nasal situation. m and b, n and d...
@@souhi1027 I agreee my Korean sounds much better when my nose is blocked
for anyone wondering if its "de" or "ne", its both.
in english, you usually say the "n" sound by pushing your tongue to the roof of your mouth, then making the sound.
in Korean, to say "네" you instead put your tongue up against your teeth with your mouth closed (teeth shut), NOT the roof of your mouth.
Do you see how this way of saying "n" sound is similar to how in english you say "d" sound? (you out your tongue behind your teeth then pull it back to make the actual "d" sound)
Hence, when you say "네" you may hear a combo of "de" and "ne" because both sounds are made with almost identical tongue/vocal movement (you hear "de" when the tongue is pulled faster than the mouth opens to make the ”eh" sound)
Remember, 한굴 alphabet is based on how your mouth looks while saying it.
For example, ㄴ where the vertical stick is your teeth and horizontal stick is your tongue.
Hope this helps y'all 🙏
I had to help my friend understand this. Also there's a nasally sound when Korean is spoken which also plays into it. I know many people get confused by this, so thanks for the explanation
I was wondering why it sounds like "ne" in the beginning, but I only heard "de" towards the end of video
thx alot
Does it sound like Nde?
But are you supposed to engage your nose in the sound or not? The actual main difference between d and n sounds in many languages is that n involves the nose, making it a nasal sound. It seems like somehow they aren't using the nose at all for this sound in Korean.
Korean letters:🙂
Korean Words:💀
Lesson: "Ne"
All the examples: "De"
Meanwhile me according to whose mother language "Ne" means "Take" & "De" means "Give"😅😶
bengali
@@Whatever_432 Hya😊
@@bonuravenclawprincess3898 😇
In portuguese too: Dê = Give.
But "Né" means "Isn't" (from "não é" [is not]) and It's used very closer to "Ne" in korean and japanese.
@@vastoaspecto Thanks 4 the info😇
'Ne' ➡️ 'De'
'Jincha' ➡️ 'Chincha'
'Mian' ➡️ 'Bian'
Foreigners ➡️ Confused
Hotel? ➡️ Trivago!
That's so true 😅😅
To be honest mian actually sounds bian I don't know how they pronounce it 😅
Hotel trivago 😂
Hotel Trivago KKKKKKK
I'm definitely a foreigner.
and gwenchana - kenchana
Is it pronounced as "Ne" or "De"?? It sounded different in each case.
Because of tongue placement it sounds like both to English speakers. We pronounce the “N” sound with our tongue at the the roof of the mouth and in Korean it’s done with the tongue in between your teeth. Kinda like when we pronounce “th” but without the air.
I clearly hear: Just remember the magic word "ne" (first time).... But then, in all the others, I hear: "de"... Don't you?
I guess you just have to get used to it there are a lot of similar cases in Korean, like ㅂ(b/p) and ㅁ(m). I guess they sound soo similar to them they can't really differentiate and use a sound in between but to other languages the difference is loud and clear🤷🏼♂️
The Korean consonants ㄴ and ㅁ are both nasal consonants, meaning when you pronounce them air comes out of your nose. Sometimes, especially with words like 네 or 뭐 Korean people/speakers won’t let air come out of their nose. Thus, giving the illusion they’re saying the ㄷ or ㅂ sound instead. This is what commonly happens but sometimes they’ll pronounce the nasal consonant, you’ll sound more slightly more natrual if you don’t. The Ne versus De sound is misconstrued because Korean and English are not a one to one language. Whilst the Korean and English alphabet have some common sounds, they’re both have entirely different tongue placements and intonations. The Korean ㄷ and English D don’t sound the same and shouldn’t be used interchangeably. Anyway, thank you for reading this and I hope it helps!
@@somerandomwords this doesn't explain anything. Same things can be said for any other languages. M and N are nasal sounds and if you hold your nose while talking they do sound like d and b but so what? IMO they should own up to it and teach it like that. Just say ㅁ is m but sometimes sounds like b 😆 like "c" is "k" but sometimes "s"😂
미쳐 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ폭풍 네 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ 진짜네😂😂😂😂
동의합니다 ☝️ 한국어는 정말 쉽고 재미있어요!
"Korean super easy"
"Neeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee"
Yeah sorry ne
Hi ❤❤❤❤
Ne🎉
She : you got it?
me : ne!
Same 😂
Me too 😂😊
Same pinch 😂😂😂
True
Same
When I first moved to Korea, I used this ALL the time 😂
You are are the best🇰🇷💜thank you
"Just remember the word Ne!"
Meanwhile her: Neeeee Deeeeee
I come from Tanzania I want you to teach me I WhatsApp please I want to speak English
Please I beg you because if I try to learn my self I failed Please help me I want to know if you have time help me
Please I beg you because if I try to learn my self I failed Please help me I want to know if you have time help me
@@isdoryevance49 I'm sorry i don't have time I'm busy studying bcz we have a lot in grade 4
Hlw@@isdoryevance49
she said "ne" but i am just listening de😂😂
😊😊😊😊
Thank u so much Hailey 💜
정말 좋아요 💐
I love your videos ❤❤❤❤❤😊
korean never was easy and never will be easy its just something like gem, you try hard to get it but you won’t regret the beauty of the language
She said super easy. 😮😮but it sounded differently. first ne and after de...🙃🙃🙃
😂😂😂
Take it easy..😂❤
I'm korean. I think Americans also use"come on" in many situations.
"You got it?"
Ne..
Just like.. Indians " achcha" 😂😂😂
.
.
Thanks for 100 likes... I have never got this much likes 😅☺️
Omg Bangladesh too😅
Lol ❤from india
Not achha it's" ji"
@@sasmitabehera3788 also ji lol!
Who remember PKs Iconic Achcha..... 😅
This helped me so much thank you 언니💗
Omg love you 💕
Korea = ne (magic word)
India = thik hai ( magic word) 😂😂❤
I think it should be "achaa"
@@Enha-Gurlachcha ji thik hai 😅
@@its_Earthling7 Bro! You just used "achaa" and "thik hai" in one sentence!
@@Enha-Gurl that's the point 😅
@@its_Earthling7 Lol😂😂 I love the way you explained/wrote your point 😂😂
Just remember "ne"
But she said "de de de de" 😂😂
Oh I can't believe that I have many likes 🫢🤭
Thank you for the likes 🫰🏻
It's Korean pronunciation. They sometimes stress (I think that's what its called) some consonants if it's at the beginning of a word 😭
@@annabel.okonkwo hmmmmm so that's why they find dificult separate 'b' and 'v'? ok thx
Yeah thats why korean is so easy
When it starts it N they pronounce it as D just like M then pronounce it as B..but for foreigners it's fine to pronounce as how we read it..
@@valeriegasmin that's true but not all the time. They still say the original pronunciation a lot.
매우 감사합니다 ❤
Your my favourite korean teacher😊
She
( Bye ) De dee deeee deeeeeeeee deeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.......😅😅😅😂😂❤❤❤ Anyway she is so sweet
I just love the way she smiles🥺❤️ cuteness overloaded💖✨
okay the picture looks amazing but i could not go barefoot on nyc streets. props to her
I’m a Spanish speaker myself and when you said Ne, and you were pronouncing it in different scenarios it sounded like Te (Tea) in Spanish hahaha 😂 great job teacher. I need to teach myself hangul this year, it’s my dream to visit South Korea 🇰🇷 in the future!❤
Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Ne Korea is so ez bro 😂😂
I can understand how g and k can sound similar or m to b or p to b even s->j->ch and d->t.
But how nae is meant to sound like dae, is totally strange to me.
For ones who are confused cause it sounds like "de"
So I'm leatning Korean,and some letters sound different in the context they speak,in this time sometimes it sounds like it writes: "ne",but usually it's like de
But if you listen closely,you'll hear that it's not just de,it's something between d and n
💖hope this helps💖
Yeah, like how ge sounds like ke
@@mizzydizzyz yes
Maybe an allophone, like tea and trip in english?
@@anggakaruniawan I guess, Idk, annyeonghaseyo!
Guys here are some other tips to learn Korean:
1. Learn all of the vowels and double vowels
2. Learn all the consonants
3. Practice reading in Korean
4. Learn words
5. Practice writing when you know some words
6. Learn grammar
7. Expand your vocabulary
8. Watch K dramas and listen to K-pop to understand how fluent people speak
9. Practice every day
Some apps you can practice on are:
DuoLingo, Cake, and LingoDeer
Those apps cannot make you fluent but can help you improve your vocabulary and grammar
What can make you fluent after you’ve done all of those apps is watching K dramas or listening to K pop and practicing with someone who’s fluent in Korean
Thanks for reading 😊
Tqq for saying ❤❤
Never use duolingo I'd recommend busuu it's a app for learning languages and it's really good
The use of "네" is easy to understand as an Indian cause we also use "है" like that 😅 thank you our dear teacher 💜you're so amazing 😊
Sahi kha 😂😂
Ha yar 😂
Nooo😭
And also Accha 😅
@@bansidave3445 right 😂
Thank you for letting me learn
Thank you sister 😅😊
Its easy because your teaching is magic ✨ hailey mam ❤❤❤❤ thank you
What teaching?!!!! It’s just a money-making scam, pretending to be teaching. 😮
but you're still here cry harder LOL @@UkOutreach
and its not a scam lol
"Ne" or "De", what is the right pronunciation??🤷♀️
that's what i wanna know too
She actually is saying "ne" each time, but the Korean n has the same tongue position as the Korean d, so to non-native ears they can sound alike. It's like an illusion, and because you are expecting an n sound, but hear a half n, half d sound, your brain interprets it as more of a d than an n. The same thing often happens with the Japanese r and l sounds, for example.
@@takewithfood That's so kind of you Dear for explaining about this.🤍💛
@@takewithfoodright, I just watched a video about 네 pronunciation and it is all just because of the tongue position.
Trying to say "ne" with your nose completely close (like with a strong cold) 😅
It's sama in English version when you say Data,Data,Data 🗿
😂😂😂
What?
Awesome information
😊😊😊😊thank you❤ for teaching Korean
FOR EVERYONE CONFUSED: The correct/regular sound is "ne", not "de". Most Koreans throughout the country pronounce it that way.
is it Ne or De?
It's like they
I am Korean. She has never pronounced "de." You are mistaken.
You say ne but i hear de😂😂
Kya de 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Kehna kya chahte ho
@@PawanMehra-ll3rb Didi ko de do.
You are so adorable!
So beautiful ❤❤❤
Gamsahamnida unnie neeee learning from u
Korean is super easy for koreans but our indians took 1000 years to u
nderstand the korean
Edit: Thanks for 6likes❤
😂😂you got 3 now!
So ney is yes dey for everything else 😅
Ne ne ne ne ne ne de ❤😂
So adorable.
Why it's sound like de ????? I'm confused 🤔
'KOREAN IS SUPER EASY'
me : for koreans...
Why it sounds like, "Dae"???
Hy you are my favourite UA-camr 😊😍 second time hello😇
Thank you ❤ teacher
Them : R you mad ??
Me : neeeee
Them : goodbye, we never meet again
Me : neee
Them : what ?
Me : ne ne neeeee neeeeeee
😂😂😂😂
the fact she pronounces it "de" instead of how it's actually written, makes her prove that Korean isn't that easy 😂😂
What's your name?
Me : ne
What?
Me : ne 😂
Ne ne ne neeeeee.... 😅😅😅❤❤❤
Thankyou
Thanks now I know what to do when I go in korea haha
Thanks you ❤❤
She made my day with her smile ❤
Bye is so hilarious 😂
고맙습니다
응 👍I learned Korean from you so thank you ❤
You help me a lot😊
네 👍🏻 so cute ^^
Good ❤❤❤😊😂😂😂
perfect! Now I can speak fluently korean😂
ㅋㅋㅋㅋ
perfect!
So it's more like "Dae" sound but in korean spells "Ne"
감삽니다❤
You are so cute 🤗🤗♥️♥️
Pretty❤
so nice🥰
Noooo way ❤❤❤❤
de de pyaar(love) de ,pyaar de de 😂😂😂😂
She is soo cute
Cutey ❤❤❤❤😍😍😍
I can watch any kdrama without subtitles now. You are amazing
You are so beautiful nuna....❤❤
Give me this
Na😂😂😂
😂😂😂 I love. This ne
네 👍
Aprika!!! I miss my Songsengneem!!!
Ohh awesome ❤❤lots of love from india
+ Hıhıımm
- Ihııhh
? Hımm
🤨Hııımmm
😏Hıımmm
😟Hııııııı
🤭Hıhı
Yaaaaaa!!!!!!....you kinda look like jisoo💗💗💗💗💗
✨De de de deee deeeeee✨😂😂😂😂💔
Your so beautiful❤
Your haircut reminds me so much of Jihyo 😊
Thanks
Ne ne ne 😂
You are super beautiful ❤️
Ne = pronuce de
PRONOUNCIATION BRO 😎💜♾️